Alison Coleman EU Project Coordinator. www.transparencyinternational.eu Increase Transparency and Accountability In most countries surveyed more people.

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Presentation transcript:

Alison Coleman EU Project Coordinator

Increase Transparency and Accountability In most countries surveyed more people believed in the effectiveness of journalists than in national anti-bribery laws. Journalism and its possible effect of naming and shaming is seen as a very effective deterrent to corruption. WORKING WITH THE MEDIA

Corruption doesn’t respect borders In a world where people, money, and businesses can quickly and freely move across borders it means that crime and corruption are also going global. Investigating international corruption cases, following illicit flows of money across borders or just swathing through huge amounts of data files takes cooperation, technological expertise and many other skill sets. Investigations now need collaboration and the ability to use new technology to make sense of all the available data. There’s been Swissleaks, Luxleaks, NSA leaks and Yanukovychleaks. There are stories about shell companies buying up New York, Petrobras bribery investigations and politicians laundering their money. Swissleaks LuxleaksNSA leaksYanukovychleaksshell companies, Petrobras bribery investigationspoliticians TRANSBOUNDARY MOVEMENT

The rumours about the demise of investigative journalism have been greatly exaggerated. Only a few short years ago many people were sounding the death knell. News was moving from print to digital, ad sales were down, the financial crisis was taking its toll and newsrooms were closing or shrinking across the globe. With money so tight it was hard to justify these in-depth, time consuming, resource draining investigations. FUTURE OF JOURNALISM

One of the transformations has been in the way that investigative journalists work. While in the past they may have been solitary creatures, (lone wolves) reluctant to share their information and sources - a cultural change towards collaborative journalism is happening. Journalists are now sharing their methods and skills and are working together to break stories. EUROPEAN CORRUPTION OBSERVATORY

Alongside this, access to information is also increasing and data journalism is on the rise. Data analysis and data visualization are helping investigative journalists transform enormous amounts of information into easily accessible and compelling stories. EUROPEAN CORRUPTION OBSERVATORY

Crime and corruption are also going global. The documents obtained by ICIJ via the French newspaper Le Monde are already the basis of tax investigations in multiple countries after originally being shared by French tax authorities. The leaked files provide details on the names, professions and value of assets of over 100,000 HSBC clients, who included royalty, politicians, public figures, celebrities and business leaders in more than 200 countries.basis of tax investigations SWISS LEAKS

International Consortium of Investigative Journalists worked with more than 140 reporters in 45 countries140 reporters in 45 countries 60,000 leaked files, some of which provide explicit details of how the bank was aware of wrongdoing by some clients. The total value held in the bank accounts exceeds $100 billion ICIJ and its media partners used traditional reporting methods as well as data analysis and online tools designed especially for this project. SWISS LEAKS

Journalism Fund EU European Journalism Centre ICIJ IRE Baltic centre for investigative journalism GIJN OCCRP SCOOP Bureau of Investigative Journalism Centre for Investigative Journalism Hacks/Hackers INVESTIGATIVE JOURNALISM

Provide an evidence base for EU policy making Facilitate analysis and identification of corruption trends Increase transnational knowledge of corruption Create a taxonomy of corruption stories Provide a platform for exchange and networking Promote Pan European collaboration What's Missing? A media monitoring tool on corruption Not just about investigative journalism EUROPEAN CORRUPTION OBSERVATORY

HOW DOES IT WORK

RSS FEEDS Initially wanted the top 5 media sites in each member state – plus wires, international press etc Minimum of 140 RSS feeds Currently tracking 88

SEARCH TERMS (IN ALL EU LANGUAGES) 1.Asset Recovery 2.Bribery 3.Clientelism 4.Collusion 5.Corruption 6.Debarment 7.Price fixing 8.Conflict of interest 9.Cronyism 10.Embezzlement 11.Extortion 12.Facilitation payment 13.Fraud 14.False accounting 15.Graft 16.Illegal lobbying 17.Illicit political contribution 18.Kickback 19.Insider Trading 20.Misuse of Public Position 21.Money Laundering 22.Nepotism 23.Peddling influence 24.Policy Capture 25.Revolving Door 26.Solicitation 27.State capture 28.Tax evasion 29.Trafficking influence 30.Vote-buying 31.Whistleblower 32.Whistle-blower 33.Whistleblowing 34.Whistle-blowing

CORRUPTION ISSUE 1.Blackmail 2.Bribery 3.Clientelism/ Patronage 4.Collusion/ Cartel /Price Fixing 5.Conflict of Interest 6.Cronyism 7.Data Theft 8.Embezzlement 9.Facilitating Tax Evasion 10.Facilitation Payment 11.Favouritism 12.Fraud/ False Accounting 13.Gift Giving 14.Illegal Lobbying 15.Illicit Political Contribution 16.Inefficiency/ Red Tape 17.Kickback 18.Lack of Transparency 19.Mismanagement of Public Funds 20.Misuse of Insider information 21.Misuse of Public Position 22.Money Laundering 23.Nepotism 24.Revolving Door 25.Sexual Favours 26.Theft 27.Trafficking of Influence 28.Vote-buying 29.Welfare Fraud 30.Whistleblower Retaliation 31.Withholding of Public Information

SECTORS 1.Agriculture and Farming 2.Banking and Finance 3.Civil Society 4.Construction 5.Customs and Immigration 6.Defence and Security 1.Military 7.Education 8.Executive/Government 9.Health 1.Healthcare 2.Medical services 3.Pharmaceutical 10.Independent Oversight Institutions 1.Anti-Corruption Agencies 2.Audit Institutions 3.Electoral Management Body 4.Ombudsman 11.Judiciary 12.Labour and Employment 13.Land and Property 1.Land Services 2.Real Estate 3.Registry and Permit Services 14.Legislative / Parliament 15.Manufacturing 16.Media 17.Natural Resources 1.Fisheries 2.Forestry 3.Mining 4.Oil and Gas 5.Water 18.Police 19.Political Parties 20.Power Generation and Transmission 21.Private Sector 22.Public Administration 23.Religion 24.Tax Authority 25.Technology 26.Transport 27.Utilities 1.Electricity 2.Gas 3.Telecommunications 4.Waste disposal 5.Water and Sanitation

ECO MATCH Civil Society Campaigners Investigative Journalists Hackers Policy Officials Law enforcement agencies Corruption Experts Researchers Access to information experts ECO

EUROPEAN CORRUPTION OBSERVATORY

CURRENT CHALLENGES RSS Feeds that don’t work Too many search returns (over 5,800 articles sitting in queues) Automatic Translation does not work well Slow manual process – read the article, write a summary, tag the article

DEVELOPMENT PHASE 2 Better RSS searching for improved results Grouping articles to create cases Reducing manual input / creating a sustainable database Analysing the data produced and creating visualisations Scaling up ECO Match to a working pilot network

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